CCH Logo
Contact Us | CCH Online Store | Site Map    

  
navigation tabnavigation tab Home 
navigation tabnavigation tab About Us 
navigation tabnavigation tab Order Products 
navigation tabnavigation tab Press Center 
navigation tabnavigation tab Customer Service 
navigation tabnavigation tab Career Opportunities 
navigation tab
   Home
 

CCH can assist you with stories, including interviews with CCH subject experts. Also, the 2010
CCH Whole Ball of Tax
is available in print. Please contact:
 
Leslie Bonacum
(847) 267-7153
mediahelp@cch.com
 
Neil Allen
(847) 267-2179
neil.allen@wolterskluwer.com

Visit the CCH Whole Ball of Tax site often as new releases and other updates will be posted throughout the tax season.

CCH provides special CCH Tax Briefings on key topics at: CCHGroup.com/Legislation/Briefings.

 
2010 CCH Whole Ball of Tax
Release (24) | Back to WBOT

2010 CCH Whole Ball of Tax

Contact:
Leslie Bonacum
, 847-267-7153, mediahelp@cch.com
Neil Allen, 847-267-2179, neil.allen@wolterskluwer.com

You Can Amend Your Return to Increase Refund, Correct Mistakes, CCH Says

(RIVERWOODS, ILL., January 2010) – Even taxes can be better the second time around, when an amended return puts cash in your pocket, according to CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business and a leading provider of tax, accounting and audit information, software and services (CCHGroup.com). You can usually get all that’s coming to you by filling out and filing Form 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. And even if a change to your return costs you, paying a few dollars of extra tax voluntarily with an amended return is preferable to having the IRS on your tail attempting to collect interest and penalties as well.

Amended returns not only correct mistakes but can open up previous years’ taxes for adjustment, according to CCH Senior Federal Tax Analyst John W. Roth, JD, LLM.

“An amended return is the taxpayer’s way to correct an error, add something that’s been left out, change a previous return to reflect a loss or change a choice that the taxpayer made on a return. If the change is in the taxpayer’s favor, the amended return also acts as a request for a refund,” Roth said.

Some mistakes and omissions don’t require you to file an amended return, however. The IRS will usually correct any math errors and either send you a refund or a bill for any resulting difference in your tax. If you forgot to attach a form or schedule, the IRS will ask you for additional information.

Homebuyers Can Amend Return, Get Refund

People who qualify for the homebuyer’s credit and who purchase a home in 2010 may use an amended return to claim the refundable credit against their 2009 taxes.

“The law allows them to treat the purchase as having taken place on December 31, 2009,” Roth explained. “So even if they’ve already filed their 2009 taxes, they can file an amended return and get a refund.”

A homeowner’s credit is available to purchasers who either have had no “ownership interest” in a home for the last three years or who have owned a home for five out of the last eight years. They must have a contract on the home by April 30 and close on the home by June 30 of this year. The purchase price must be no more than $800,000 and the purchaser’s income can be no more than $245,000 if they file jointly, no more than $145,000 for other filers. The credit is 10 percent of the purchase price, capped at $8,000 for qualifying first-time homebuyers, who had no interest in the last three years, and $6,500 for qualifying existing homeowners who owned and used their homes for five out of the last eight years.

“Some people will be able to close on their homes before they file their 2009 returns, so they can take the credit then, but those who haven’t closed by then have two options,” Roth noted.

One option is to apply for an extension on their 2009 returns; the other is to file on time and amend the return after their purchase is made.

“If they file for an extension, they still have to estimate the tax that will eventually be due and pay that by April 15 to avoid a penalty,” Roth noted. “If they file and then amend, there’s no uncertainty about who owes what at any stage of the process.”

Amended Returns for Military Personnel

Also helped by an amended return are members of the military who were allowed to make a contribution to an IRA for tax years 2004 and 2005, based on excludable combat pay that was not counted as earned income in those years but now can be for IRA purposes. If they made the contribution by May 28, 2009, they now have until May 28, 2010, in which to amend their returns to claim a refund.

Amended Returns Offer Second Chance

An amended return also can be used to clear up a tax picture that wasn’t previously certain.

Suppose some bills have piled up, and when you take a first look at your taxes, it seems that you’re due a refund that will cover them. One of your itemized deductions will be for state income tax. But you might be due an even bigger refund if you took the deduction for state sales taxes instead. (You can’t take both.) The problem is, it will take some time to sort through all your records to see if you’ve saved enough receipts to make the sales tax deduction worthwhile.

To cover your immediate needs, you can file your return right away, claiming the income tax deduction and using the refund to pay your expenses. At a later date, you can add up all your receipts and, if the sales tax deduction produces an even larger refund, you can file Form 1040X to claim the difference.

Time to sort things out can also be an issue when you need to determine that a stock actually became worthless – or a debt became uncollectible – in a previous tax year. These also are situations that can be addressed through amended returns.

Use Amended Returns to Make, Change Elections

Amended returns are also a common way of making or changing certain tax elections, or choices of tax treatment. Dozens of elections are available relating to business, farming, foreign income, residency status and other special situations.

For example, if one spouse is a nonresident alien, a couple normally cannot file jointly, but they can elect that status for a year in which the spouse becomes a U.S. resident. If they do not do so on their original return, they can do so on an amended return.

“Taxpayers will have to do some research or consult a qualified tax advisor to learn whether an election can be changed and how long they have to make or change it by filing an amended return,” Roth noted. “Sometimes they have up to three years from the original due date of the return, sometimes up to the original due date plus extensions, sometimes only up to the due date without extensions.”

Changing Filing Status

Amended returns are usually required when a couple has their marriage annulled. Unlike a divorce decree, an annulment looks backward and undoes a marriage from its beginning. Since unmarried couples don’t qualify for joint filing status, any joint returns filed for prior tax years have to be “undone” by the filing of amended returns as single filers.

“This is a rare circumstance in which people who have filed a joint return can change their filing status,” Roth said. “Normally, after a joint return has been filed, the filing status can’t be changed – for example, to married filing separately – unless the amended returns are filed before the due date for that year.”

If a couple has filed jointly but wants to change to married filing separately and the filing deadline hasn’t passed, the two spouses must take two different paths. The spouse whose Social Security Number appears first on Form 1040 files a Form 1040X. The other spouse files a new Form 1040.

Amended Returns for Losses

Amended returns can also come into play if casualty losses occur in an area determined by the President to be a “disaster area.” In this case, a property owner can elect his or her losses in the year immediately before the tax year when the disaster occurred.

This allowed some taxpayers who suffered losses in 2009 to get some quick relief by applying their loss to their already-paid 2008 tax bills and getting refund checks. By contrast, taxpayers with 2009 casualty losses outside of federally declared (formerly presidentially designated) disaster areas have to wait until they file their 2009 returns to see their tax relief.

Business losses can also give rise to amended returns. Normally, a net operating loss can be carried back to the previous two tax years, and carried forward to be applied against income in the succeeding 20 years. Carrying the loss back can produce a refund. Last year’s stimulus legislation allowed businesses with net operating losses for years ending in 2008 or 2009 to be carried back up to five years.

“If you carry back a loss, you also have to recompute any deduction you took that was tied to adjusted gross income, such as a deduction for medical expenses,” Roth observed.

Amended Returns Not Electronic

While an amended return allows you to bring your tax status up to date, the actual process of filing takes you back to an earlier era of IRS processing and service. Form 1040X is one of the few that can’t be filed electronically. Your tax software may allow you to fill out and print the form, but you’ll have to send a paper copy to the IRS. It can take the IRS 12 weeks to process the form, and don’t bother calling the automated tax line for a quick check on the progress. You must call the live-answer line, 1-800-829-1040, instead. If you’re due a refund, look for your check in the mail. Electronic deposit is not available when you file an amended return.

“There’s certainly a benefit to getting things right the first time around, but it can be worth the wait when an amended return puts money back in your pocket,” Roth noted.

About CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business

CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business (CCHGroup.com) is a leading provider of tax, accounting and audit information, software and services. It has served tax, accounting and business professionals since 1913. CCH is based in Riverwoods, Ill. Wolters Kluwer is a leading global information services and publishing company. Wolters Kluwer is headquartered in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands (www.wolterskluwer.com).

-- ### --

nb-10-23

 

 

       


   © 2024, CCH INCORPORATED. All rights reserved.   

  Back to Top | Print this Page   
spacer